Is it possible to take homeopathic remedies with Valium at the same time?
It is for performance anxiety – have tried Gelsemium before but wondering could I take it with 5mg Valium to make sure. Have huge presentation to give and super nervous.
Chosen Answer:
Homeopathic remedies basically don’t have any interactions with drugs, so as long as your doctor prescribed the Valium to you and you’ve used it before (just to make sure you know how your body responds), you should have no problem at all.
by: oldtimekid2
on: 30th April 09

28 de April, 2009 at 7:41 am
Homeopathic remedies basically don’t have any interactions with drugs, so as long as your doctor prescribed the Valium to you and you’ve used it before (just to make sure you know how your body responds), you should have no problem at all.
28 de April, 2009 at 11:58 am
Homeopathic remedies are extremely diluted compounds, some to the point where there is no solute left in the “solution.” Since there is nothing in them, I do not think there could be any harmful drug interactions.
29 de April, 2009 at 1:59 pm
Gelsemium is an herbal remedy. It’s not homeopathic. Homeopathic remedies have no drug interactions because they don’t do anything – they’re just water or sugar pills.
Herbals can have drug interactions, like St. Johns Wort makes your birth control pills fail.
ASK YOUR DOCTOR
Homeopathy has become a marketing term, and the companies that use it make millions of dollars selling mostly placebos and fakery to people who really want to believe. They WANT you to think “oh, I’ve heard about homeopathy for years, so it must work.”
What is homeopathy?
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Classical homeopathy originated in the 19th century with Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843) as an alternative to the standard medical practices of the day, such as phlebotomy or bloodletting. Hahnemann’s theories were based on metaphysical energies rather than on biology, anatomy, chemistry, etc.
Classical homeopathy is generally defined as a system of medical treatment based on the use of infinitesimal amounts of substances that in larger doses produce effects similar to those of the disease being treated. For example, the homeopathic remedy for sleeplessness is a highly diluted dose of caffeine. Hahnemann believed that very small doses of a substance could have very powerful reverse healing effects because their potency could be affected by vigorous and methodical shaking (succussion).
So in other words, if you put a tiny amount of some ingredient in water, then shake it, then dilute it, then shake it more, then dilute it more, eventually you’ll have an effective medicine.
Homeopathic dilutions
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Homeopathic dilutions are indicated by letters like X or C. “X” means dilute 10 to 1. So a dilution of 6X means do a 1 in 10 dilution six times. Or, in other words, 1 part ingredient, 1,000,000 parts water (six zeros). “C” means dilute 100 times. So a 6C dilution means 1 part ingredient, 1,000,000,000,000 parts water. You can find many homeopathic remedies available with 30C dilutions – you do the math. And the totally ridiculous bit of advertising – the bigger the dilution, the “stronger” the medication.
They’re selling you WATER. Or, they’re selling you a sugar pill on which water has been sprinkled!!!
For example, one gram of the very popular homeopathic remedy Oscillococcinum contains 1 gram of sugar and 1/10^400 (1 over 10 followed by 400 zeros) of diseased duck liver. Now, physics will tell you that there is not a single molecule of duck liver in your sugar pill. It’s just a sugar pill.
Hahnemann came up with his ideas before we knew what molecules were. So when molecular theory came along and proved that many homeopathic remedies didn’t have even a single molecule of the original substance, homeopathy proponents like Jacques Benveniste tried to prove that water “remembered” the original ingredient. (1) They never explained how the water “remembered” the homeopathic ingredient but didn’t “remember” the copper pipes, glass jars, or contents of the lake it came from. (2) Benveniste was completely discredited when it turned out his lab technicians were altering data so that their boss would have positive results.
http://br.geocities.com/criticandokardec/benveniste02.pdf
Do Homeopathic Remedies work?
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Because it has marketing appeal, “Homeopathic” is used as a label on many things, including soothing creams and herbal remedies that are NOT classic homeopathic dilutions. An herbal remedy or some moisturizing cream may work just fine. However, the classic homeopathic dilution liquids and pills do NOT work better than water or sugar pills.
1) Large scale, well-designed studies of homeopathic dilutions find they work no better than placebo. (But don’t underestimate the power of a well-delivered placebo to cure somebody’s complaint. Just don’t use it for cancer or malaria or AIDS, etc.)
2) Many of the people who point to studies and say “See! This study says it works” are pointing to the same set of studies by Reilly published in Lancet in the early 90s. Nobody has been able to independently repeat Dr. Reilly’s results.
3) There is a million dollar prize available from JREF for anyone who can show, under reasonable scientific controls, that homeopathic dilutions work better than placebo. The prize has been available for over a decade, and nobody has claimed it. Here is an example of a failed attempt: http://www.abc.net.au/catalyst/stories/s827502.htm
4) No homeopathic practitioner (or anyone else) can tell the difference between a vial of homeopathic dilution and plain water.
5) James Randi regularly demonstrates homeopathic remedies do nothing by taking an entire box of a homeopathic sedative.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=2785985155605802136
In short, homeopathic pills/dilutions don’t work any better than sugar pills.
Why does the FDA allow ineffective “medicines” to be sold?
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Because of their long use in the United States, the U.S. Congress passed a law in 1938 declaring that homeopathic remedies are to be regulated by the FDA in the same manner as nonprescription, over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, which means that they can be purchased without a physician’s prescription. Today, although conventional prescription drugs and new OTC drugs must undergo thorough testing and review by the FDA for safety and effectiveness before they can be sold, this requirement does not apply to homeopathic remedies. In other words, the FDA gave anything with the words “homeopathic” an exemption from the requirement to demonstrate that they’re effective.
Most people know that the herbal remedy St. Johns Wort can reduce the effectiveness of birth control pills. However, unlike herbal remedies, there are no “drug interaction” warnings for homeopathic remedies. Why? Because they don’t do anything.